This Jupiter-like Planet is
known as Beta Pictoris b, it's a gas giant that's situated 63 light-years from
Planet Earth and roughly 10 times more gigantic than Jupiter. Observations from
the ESO's Very Large Telescope measured its revolution rate, a blazing 62,000
mph i.e. 100,000 km/hr at the equator, so its day is merely eight hours lengthy.

That's a truly short period related
to the Earth's 24 hours, but we're revolving at a modest 1,060 mph. Beta
Pictoris b is distinctly bigger than our solar system's biggest planet,
Jupiter, by comparison, Jupiter's equator spins round about 29,000 mph, making
a day 10 hours long.

"It is not known why some
planets spin fast and others more slowly," daid co-author Remco de Kok in
an ESO report, "but this first measurement of an exoplanet's rotation
shows that the trend seen in the Solar System, where the more massive planets
spin faster, also holds true for exoplanets. This must be some universal consequence
of the way planets form."

At 20-million-years-old, Beta
Pictoris b is a fresh planet, but with time, it's projected to cool and contract,
which will create it spin even faster.